Scott Clavenna is co-founder and CEO of Latitude Media, where he is leading its strategy and expansion into news, industry research, and events on the frontiers of climate technology. He occasionally contributes interviews and commentary pieces to the news site.
Most recently, Scott Clavenna served as Chairman of Wood Mackenzie Power & Renewables, where he contributed to the strategic guidance of Wood Mackenzie’s work in the global energy transition. Prior to Wood Mackenzie, Mr. Clavenna was the co-founder and CEO of Greentech Media and helped develop it into the leading source of integrated news, industry research, conferences, and executive councils in the clean energy economy. Greentech Media was acquired by Wood Mackenzie in 2016 and in the subsequent 4 years achieved all the goals of the acquisition while expanding its reach and breadth through its integration with acquired organizations and Wood Mackenzie’s power markets and energy transition groups.
Prior to Greentech Media, Mr. Clavenna was a market analyst in the broadband telecommunications industry in various media and research organizations.
The Oracle-OpenAI-SoftBank project in Saline Township has faced enthusiasm and hardship — and 2026 comes with further challenges.
Will the assumptions of the AI market hold?
The power sector is leaning in on load growth.
Estimates suggest that at least a quarter of incremental data center demand through 2030 will be met by BTM solutions.
How do you know if the exuberance for artificial intelligence is causing over-investment? Here's what to watch for.
Yotta took place at the same time and place as RE+ — and arguably had more to say about the big questions driving the energy sector.
Unpacking the reasons behind the collective sense that fossil gas is back.
Tech giants should be using their growing political power to insist on a net-zero energy supply.
PJM's annual auction demonstrated that data centers will continue to push up capacity prices.
Converting crypto mines is one approach to capitalizing on AI demand. Building outrageously huge new data center campuses is another.